wishful thinking

一厢情愿的想法一厢情愿一厢情愿地想

wishful thinking 的定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. interpretation of facts, actions, words, etc., as one would like them to be rather than as they really are; imagining as actual what is not.

wishful thinking 近义词

n. 名词 noun

belief that wishes become reality

wishful thinking 的近义词 5
wishful thinking 的反义词 1

更多wishful thinking例句

  1. For all their wishful thinking, climate science suggests there is no future in the region that does not include serious disruptions to its economy, growth trajectory and perhaps even quality of life.
  2. Such initiatives sound a little vague, and calls for change always have a whiff of wishful thinking about them.
  3. They took a sip more out of curiosity than wishful thinking.
  4. Well, I’m here to say that’s wishful thinking for a pair of $130 earbuds.
  5. Given the full year during which it could have taken place, that certainly raises questions about just how much they were going on, beyond wishful thinking and innuendo.
  6. While Huckabee is thinking about his run for president, I thought it was time to think about Huckabee.
  7. But the ads are not just intended to remind the Google-curious that Paul exists and is thinking about running for president.
  8. It is hard to feel attached to where you are if you are always thinking of where you have been or where you are going.
  9. Our quest for better leaders—“Change we can believe in”— is wishful thinking.
  10. I was thinking about retiring from modeling, but spending that time with them rekindled that bug.
  11. I do not care very much how you censor or select the reading and talking and thinking of the schoolboy or schoolgirl.
  12. He, with others, thinking the miss-sahib had gone to church, was smoking the hookah of gossip in a neighboring compound.
  13. He desired his secretary to go to the devil, but, thinking better of it, he recalled him as he reached the door.
  14. But you are mistaken in thinking the force west consists of the entire Merrill Horse.
  15. Bernard sat thinking for a long time; at first with a good deal of mortification—at last with a good deal of bitterness.